ZAGREB, March 17 (Hina) - The Croatian government believes that the establishment of a special fund for the compensation of Croatian clients of the former Ljubljanska Bank would not be useful. The government also believes the fund
would not be a mechanism which could solve the issue of returning the Ljubljanska Banka debt, the Croatian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Wednesday.
ZAGREB, March 17 (Hina) - The Croatian government believes that the
establishment of a special fund for the compensation of Croatian
clients of the former Ljubljanska Bank would not be useful. The
government also believes the fund would not be a mechanism which could
solve the issue of returning the Ljubljanska Banka debt, the Croatian
Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Wednesday.#L#
The ministry voiced its position on a report submitted by Erik Jurgens
of the Netherlands which was adopted by the Committee on legal affairs
and human rights of the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly.
The report proposes a solution for the compensation of former
Ljubljanska Bank clients from Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Macedonia
and Serbia and Montenegro.
"The Croatian government has on several occasions informed Jurgens of
its standpoints regarding the obligations of the former Ljubljanska
Bank. The government regrets the fact that despite the invested
efforts Jurgens failed to determine an efficient way of solving the
justified requests of numerous citizens of Croatia and
Bosnia-Herzegovina", the ministry said in a statement.
Slovenia insists that the issue of compensating former Ljubljanska
Bank clients should be solved as a succession issue, stressing that
Slovenia had not obligations towards those clients.
The Slovene delegation to the Council of Europe on Monday expressed
satisfaction with Jurgens' proposal and the head of the Slovene
delegation warned that setting up the compensation fund would be
possible if the case was in the jurisdiction of the European Court for
Human Rights.
A member of the Slovene delegation said a delegation of Serbia and
Montenegro supported a proposal to establish such a fund, stressing
that Macedonia's position on the issue was not known because its
delegation did not attend the session.
Bosnian Prime Minister Adnan Terzic believes the issue should be
solved at a bilateral level.
(Hina) it sb